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Feedstocks of the Terrestrial Planets
Authors:Richard W Carlson  Ramon Brasser  Qing-Zhu Yin  Mario Fischer-Gödde  Liping Qin
Institution:1.Department of Terrestrial Magnetism,Carnegie Institution for Science,Washington,USA;2.Earth Life Science Institute,Tokyo Institute of Technology,Tokyo,Japan;3.Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences,University of California, Davis,Davis,USA;4.Institut für Geologie und Mineralogie,University of Cologne,Cologne,Germany;5.CAS Key Laboratory of Crust-Mantle Materials and Environment,University of Science and Technology of China,Hefei,China
Abstract:The processes of planet formation in our Solar System resulted in a final product of a small number of discreet planets and planetesimals characterized by clear compositional distinctions. A key advance on this subject was provided when nucleosynthetic isotopic variability was discovered between different meteorite groups and the terrestrial planets. This information has now been coupled with theoretical models of planetesimal growth and giant planet migration to better understand the nature of the materials accumulated into the terrestrial planets. First order conclusions include that carbonaceous chondrites appear to contribute a much smaller mass fraction to the terrestrial planets than previously suspected, that gas-driven giant planet migration could have pushed volatile-rich material into the inner Solar System, and that planetesimal formation was occurring on a sufficiently rapid time scale that global melting of asteroid-sized objects was instigated by radioactive decay of 26Al. The isotopic evidence highlights the important role of enstatite chondrites, or something with their mix of nucleosynthetic components, as feedstock for the terrestrial planets. A common degree of depletion of moderately volatile elements in the terrestrial planets points to a mechanism that can effectively separate volatile and refractory elements over a spatial scale the size of the whole inner Solar System. The large variability in iron to silicon ratios between both different meteorite groups and between the terrestrial planets suggests that mechanisms that can segregate iron metal from silicate should be given greater importance in future investigations. Such processes likely include both density separation of small grains in the nebula, but also preferential impact erosion of either the mantle or core from differentiated planets/planetesimals. The latter highlights the important role for giant impacts and collisional erosion during the late stages of planet formation.
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